Guidebook for Bistrița

Cristian
Guidebook for Bistrița

Food Scene

Crema Caffe
6 Strada Bistricioarei
Hanul Boieresc
CZECH IN CASA CU BERE
6 Strada Bistricioarei

Shopping

Angi's Pizza
13 A Calea Moldovei

Drinks & Nightlife

Atmosphere
5 Strada Constantin Roman Vivu
Club Bistrita - AnyTime
Bar with games.
Moonlight Club
Bar with games.

Entertainment & Activities

CASA EMA
2 Strada Parcului

Parks & Nature

Parcul Central
Strada Parcului

Sightseeing

National Center for Tourist Information and Promotion
6 Piața Centrală
Ansamblul Sugalete
12 Strada Dornei
Completing the construction of the wall would cease to be somewhere in 1545, the wall having high when a height of 10 m and a thickness of 2 m, surrounded by a moat depth of 3 m, filled with water through a channel derived on the Bistrita River.
Coopers Tower in Bistrița
14 Strada Dogarilor
Completing the construction of the wall would cease to be somewhere in 1545, the wall having high when a height of 10 m and a thickness of 2 m, surrounded by a moat depth of 3 m, filled with water through a channel derived on the Bistrita River.
Evangelical Church is and will remain the symbol of Bistrita. It was designed in the Gothic style, with the highest medieval tower in Romania 75 meters. Bistrita the Evangelical Church is the result of several periods of construction and radical transformation of the original Romanesque basilica, so far, do not preserve any trace of the original architectural elements, combining Gothic and Renaissance style. Following the reconstruction of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the windows were built in the late Gothic style, the basilica was turned into a church hall type and then dressed in Renaissance style by famous Italian master Petrus Italus Lugano.
Biserica Evanghelică Bistrița
Piața Centrală
Evangelical Church is and will remain the symbol of Bistrita. It was designed in the Gothic style, with the highest medieval tower in Romania 75 meters. Bistrita the Evangelical Church is the result of several periods of construction and radical transformation of the original Romanesque basilica, so far, do not preserve any trace of the original architectural elements, combining Gothic and Renaissance style. Following the reconstruction of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the windows were built in the late Gothic style, the basilica was turned into a church hall type and then dressed in Renaissance style by famous Italian master Petrus Italus Lugano.